Levy_2000_Neuropsychology_14_288

Reference

Title : Acetylcholine affects the spatial scale of attention: evidence from Alzheimer's disease - Levy_2000_Neuropsychology_14_288
Author(s) : Levy JA , Parasuraman R , Greenwood PM , Dukoff R , Sunderland T
Ref : Neuropsychology , 14 :288 , 2000
Abstract :

Location precues were used to manipulate the spatial scale of attention in visual search for a target in an array of letters in patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type (DAT) and in age-matched older controls. Cue size varied in the amount of spatial precision conferred. Scopolamine, a muscarinic antagonist, decreased overall arousal and broadened spatial attention after a precise precue (small and valid) to target location for DAT patients but not for controls, suggesting a selective effect for attentional impairment induced by cholinergic blockade. In contrast, physostigmine, a cholinesterase inhibitor, did not alter the distribution of spatial attention relative to no-drug baseline testing for patients. Results support a differential role for cholinergic mechanisms in the modulation of the spatial scale of visual attention.

PubMedSearch : Levy_2000_Neuropsychology_14_288
PubMedID: 10791868

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Citations formats

Levy JA, Parasuraman R, Greenwood PM, Dukoff R, Sunderland T (2000)
Acetylcholine affects the spatial scale of attention: evidence from Alzheimer's disease
Neuropsychology 14 :288

Levy JA, Parasuraman R, Greenwood PM, Dukoff R, Sunderland T (2000)
Neuropsychology 14 :288